| Management number | 233305875 | Release Date | 2026/06/27 | List Price | $90.00 | Model Number | 233305875 | ||
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In The Bamboo and the Stone: Zen and the Natural World, cultural historian Bill Johns unites Zen philosophy, ecology, and environmental ethics in a meditative exploration of how the natural world thinks through us. This is a book for readers drawn to mindfulness, Dōgen, Gregory Bateson, and the search for balance between human awareness and the living intelligence of the Earth. Combining Buddhist insight with ecological reflection, Johns writes not as a theorist but as a witness—listening to wind, stone, and breath until they speak in one shared language of being.Across these luminous essays, The Bamboo and the Stone explores the ancient union of body and landscape. Drawing on the teachings of Eihei Dōgen and the systems philosophy of Bateson, Johns reveals how Zen and modern ecology converge upon a single realization: mind and nature are not separate realities but one continuous conversation. The book’s prose moves with monastic patience and poetic precision—from the hush of a dawn meditation to the slow thaw of ice in a bowl of water—each scene opening into larger patterns of perception and belonging.Johns traces the evolution of ecological thought through Buddhist practice and the science of feedback, inviting readers to experience awareness as participation rather than observation. The result is both philosophical and sensuous: an argument for perceiving the world not as resource but as relation. Through chapters that move from silence to sound, from breath to perception, and from the individual body to the Earth itself, he examines the timeless Zen question of how to live without dividing the sacred from the ordinary.At the heart of the book lies a profound truth—one voiced by Dōgen in the thirteenth century and rediscovered by thinkers across cultures: “The entire Earth is the true human body.” Johns approaches this insight not as abstraction but as anatomy. He shows how the patterns that sustain ecosystems also sustain thought, how attention mirrors the rhythm of wind through bamboo, and how endurance and surrender—the stone’s stillness and the bamboo’s bending—define the spiritual architecture of survival.Written with the moral clarity and elegance that have defined Johns’s cultural histories, The Bamboo and the Stone stands at the intersection of Zen, science, and literature. It will appeal to readers of Gary Snyder, Thich Nhat Hanh, and Annie Dillard—those who sense that ecological crisis cannot be solved by information alone but must be answered through perception and care. The book’s vision is neither nostalgic nor utopian; it is grounded in practice, asking how to inhabit a world that continues to breathe despite our forgetting.The Bamboo and the Stone is at once a meditation on impermanence and a handbook for attention, offering a vision of environmental consciousness that is inwardly ethical and outwardly precise. Johns invites readers to slow their gaze, to hear the silence beneath noise, to recognize that every breath—human, animal, or planetary—is a shared act of remembering.To read this book is to step into stillness, to encounter the natural world not as backdrop but as self. It asks, with grace and urgency, what it means to live as part of the Earth’s ongoing thought—and leaves the reader with a quiet, haunting truth: awareness itself is the ecology we belong to. Read more
| ASIN | B0FW9M7NXW |
|---|---|
| XRay | Not Enabled |
| Edition | 1st |
| Language | English |
| File size | 1.4 MB |
| Page Flip | Enabled |
| Word Wise | Enabled |
| Book 8 of 12 | The Art of Attention |
| Print length | 319 pages |
| Accessibility | Learn more |
| Screen Reader | Supported |
| Publication date | October 15, 2025 |
| Enhanced typesetting | Enabled |
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